CEDAR
RAPIDS, Iowa – Southern California high school left-handed pitcher
Brady Aiken, the starting pitcher for the West Team at last August’s
Perfect Game All-American Classic in his home city of San Diego, on
Thursday was selected by the Houston Astros with the No. 1 overall
pick of the first round in the Major League Baseball June Amateur
First-Year Player Draft.
A
UCLA signee, Aiken is
the first left-handed high school pitcher selected No. 1 overall in
24 years, when the New York Yankees took left-hander Brien Taylor out of
East Carteret High School in Beaufort, N.C., in 1991. The only other
prep lefty to ever be selected first overall was 1970s sensation
David Clyde, who was scooped up by the Texas Rangers out of
Westchester High School in Houston in 1973.
Aiken
– a 6-foot-4, 210-pound, 17-year-old from Cardiff by the Sea in San
Diego County, and a recent graduate of Cathedral Catholic High School
– became
the 133rd PG All-American Classic alumnus to be selected in the first
round of the MLB amateur draft.

Just minutes after Aiken was made the No. 1 overall pick, the Miami Marlins made hard-throwing Shepherd, Texas, right-hander Tyler Kolek the No. 2 pick in the draft. Kolek was a West Team teammate of Aiken's at the PG All-American Classic -- he first roared onto the scene at the 2013 PG National Showcase -- and the Texas Christian signee has delivered his fastball at 100-plus miles-per-hour over the past 12 months.
Aiken is the seventh PG All-American Classic alumnus to be selected first
overall in the last 11 years, joining Matt Bush (2004), Justin Upton
(2005), Tim Beckham (2008), Bryce Harper (2010), Gerrit Cole (2011)
and Carlos Correa (2012). Aiken also attended the Perfect Game
National Showcase (2013), as did Upton (2004), Beckham (2007), Cole
(2007), Correa (2011) and 2013 overall No. 1 pick Mark Appel (2008).
Aiken
was not in attendance when out-going MLB commissioner Bud Selig
announced his name from the MLB Network’s Studio 42 in Secaucus,
N.J., early Thursday night, but seven other 2013 Perfect Game
All-American Classic/PG National Showcase alumni were there:
shortstops Michael Chavis, Jacob Gatewood and Nicholas Gordon;
outfielders Monte Harrison and Derek Hill; right-hander Grant Holmes
and left-hander Kodi Medeiros.
Aiken
got the starting nod for the West Team at the PG All-American Classic
ahead of other first-round hopefuls like Medeiros and Kolek,
and remembers the assignment with a special enthusiasm.
“That
was definitely one of the highlights of my life,” he told Perfect
Game during a telephone interview in late April. “Just getting
picked to play in that game is a complete honor, and then getting the
start in my hometown in front of a bunch of family and friends meant
a whole lot to me.
“It
was really cool and I appreciate Perfect Game for everything they’ve
done. Getting chosen for that game was an honor and getting to pitch
in that game was an honor; it was a great experience.”
For
much of this draft season there was very little consensus among draft
experts on who the Astros would take with the first pick – the
third straight year they’ve had the No. 1 pick – but Aiken’s
stock began to rise early into his senior high school season. He
showed a dramatic increase in velocity on his fastball, which reached
97 miles-per-hour this spring after topping out at 93 mph last fall.
He
told PG a strict September to December offseason training regimen and
a roughly 12-week stretch in which he did not pick up a baseball
attributed to the increase in velocity.
“We
were focusing on hips, core and all lower body,” Aiken said. “We
worked on basically that for three or four months, strictly trying to
get bigger and stronger … and it’s paying off right now; it’s
been a big help. Honestly, I think it’s just maturity and strength;
I really haven’t done anything different with my mechanics.
“I’m
just trying to focus a little more on tuning my mechanics up, getting
them a little better, but I’m not making any major changes. I think
what’s helped my velocity has been the (added) strength and
everything I’ve done in the offseason.”
Aiken
is enjoying a terrific senior season at Cathedral Catholic. With his
team still alive in the CIF San Diego Section Division I playoffs
early this week, Aiken stood 7-0 with a 1.06 ERA, while allowing 27
hits, striking out 111 and walking 15 in 59 2/3 innings. Opposing
batters are hitting .127 against him with a .189 on-base percentage.